The 200-year anniversary
of the birthday of
Hans Christian Andersen, the Danish storyteller, is being celebrated all over the world.
He is famous for The Ugly Duckling, The Emperor's New Clothes, The
Nightingale, and many more stories.

The NightingaleHans Christian Andersen fell in love with Jenny Lind (1820-1887), the
Swedish soprano. He wrote The Nightingale as a tribute to her in 1843.
It led to her appellation, The Swedish Nightingale. However, she did not
return his feelings. They remained good friends, and she was a particularly
important source of inspiration for his work.*

As documented by the
research findings of Icons of Europe in 2003, it is a deep irony that Jenny Lind in
1848-1849 lived through her own nightingale story with Polish composer Fryderyk Chopin
(1810-1849). He suffered from TB, and when she sang for him he felt better.
With the knowledge of Queen Victoria, Jenny Lind made in May 1849 an unsuccessful attempt
to marry Chopin, who died five months later.

Musical drama
Chopin and Jenny Lind's relationship is enacted in the musical drama Chopin and The
Nightingale (initially entitled Nightingale Opus 24). The drama is set to
original quotes of Chopin's letters that to surprising degree match quotes from Andersen's
story The Nightingale.

* Hans Christian Andersen says in
The True Story of My Life (published in 1847, the same year he met her again in
London):

"Through Jenny Lind I first became sensible of the
holiness of Art. Through her I learned that one must forget one's self in the
service of the Supreme. No books, no men, have had a more ennobling influence upon
me as a poet than Jenny Lind".